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        Home> Business

        Business on mainland attracts Taiwan

        By An Baijie in Pingtan, Fujian ( China Daily )

        Updated: 2013-04-03

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         Business on mainland attracts Taiwan

        A construction site in Pingtan county, Fujian province. Zhang Guojun / Xinhua

         Business on mainland attracts Taiwan

        Xiao Huang-biao, a Taiwan native, explains to a customer how some snacks are made at his food stand on the fifth floor of a shopping mall in Pingtan county, Fujian province. An Baijie / China Daily

        More help for people from island to travel, work and start enterprises

        Even though only a few customers go to Xiao Huang-biao's food stand each day, the Taiwan native does not regret coming to the Chinese mainland to seek his fortune.

        Xiao, 52, arrived on the mainland from his hometown of Kaohsiung five years ago. In 2012, he opened a snack stand selling southern Taiwan food in Pingtan county, Fujian province, where his wife comes from.

        His idea of opening the snack stand stems from an advertisement he saw at a hotel in Pingtan in which the local government promised to introduce policies to support and encourage Taiwan people to set up businesses in the county.

        Pingtan county is the nearest place on the mainland to Taiwan, being just 68 nautical miles from Taiwan's city of Hsinchu. It takes only two and a half hours to travel from the county to Taichung in Taiwan since the cross-Straits route opened in late 2011.

        In November that year, the State Council, China's Cabinet, approved a plan to establish a comprehensive experimental area in Pingtan. Under the plan, the central government would channel funds into the county to attract Taiwan investment and create a "paradise" for both Taiwan and local people to live in.

        Xiao said he benefited from some policies when he started the business. For example, he did not have to pay rent for his 10-square-meter food stand - apart from an initial 10,000 yuan ($1,600) fee.

        About 20 percent of his sales income goes to government taxes, which he said is acceptable.

        Xiao said he also appreciates efforts made by the local government, because some officials usually lead tourist groups to eat at his snack stand, which is on the fifth floor of a shopping mall in a sightseeing street.

        Most of the food he serves comes from Kaohsiung to ensure genuine flavor, but that has raised the cost, he said.

        Xiao said the monthly sales income is about 10,000 yuan at most - the sole income for his family of three.

        Even though the number of customers eating at his snack stand is not as many as he expected, Xiao remains optimistic about his business.

        He said the potential market on the mainland is more than in Taiwan, where natural and human resources are limited.

        He said Pingtan county is undergoing massive infrastructure construction, so it was natural that tourist numbers would decline. "But I believe the situation will be better in several years."

        Zhang Zhijun, newly appointed minister of the State Council's Taiwan Affairs Office, said on Friday that mainland authorities will announce more policies to make it more convenient for Taiwan people to travel, work and start businesses on the mainland.

        "We will do more practical things and good things for the Taiwan compatriots," he said, adding that non-governmental exchanges will be stepped up.

        Ties between the mainland and Taiwan have been boosted in recent years, with cross-Straits trade reaching a record high of $168.96 billion last year, according to the Taiwan Affairs Office.

        Nearly 69,000 mainland tourists visited Taiwan during the Spring Festival holiday in early February, about 30 percent more than last year, China News Service reported.

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